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The benefits of pro bono work for ambitious associates
"An important way to build vital skills that get lawyers noticed"

Louis O'Neill is counsel and director of pro bono at White & Case. He began his legal career as an associate at the Firm. He explains how aspiring lawyers can fulfill their ambitions to tackle injustices while also building their careers at a large commercial firm.

Navigating between "doing well" and "doing good" has traditionally required picking either a corporate or a public service path. There is still no magic bullet, but because of how big firms have evolved, there is a counter-intuitive and increasingly attractive option. These days there are great opportunities to do enormously powerful public interest work in large private firms—with the firms actively seeking the work, encouraging it and supporting it financially.

“These days there are great opportunities to do enormously powerful public interest work in large private firms”

Today's big law firms are doing pro bono work on a scale and of a quality never before seen. Some can comfortably do 100,000 pro bono hours or more in a year and take on staggeringly large and complicated rights cases, devoting to them the same kinds of resources and supervision that large corporate matters get. 

The firms are of course comfortable with such complex cases, because they routinely handle them for commercial clients. Big firms have in place the infrastructure, multi-office platform, shared knowledge base, and cutting-edge litigation and research tools to handle the most challenging cases, all of which can be brought to bear on big pro bono matters.

“The message is that pro bono work is valued and encouraged”

Most firms significantly credit pro bono hours towards associates' bonuses, and some firms allow unlimited pro bono to count for bonus purposes. The message is that pro bono work is valued and encouraged—as long as it is balanced appropriately with the need to ensure that corporate clients remain the top priority. This can lead to a heavy workload but can also offer unmatched professional development early in one's career.

Something else has changed in the world of Big Law: Pro bono is increasingly viewed as an important way to build vital skills that get lawyers noticed, and doing serious pro bono work can be an additional positive factor on the long road to partnership. Playing a leading role on big pro bono matters can help associates develop—at an accelerated pace—the project management savvy, the comfort and confidence interacting with clients, and the management perspective that firms and clients value. A strong pro bono practice can also be a way to demonstrate the future leadership potential and firm stewardship qualities of a partner candidate.

“Pro bono is increasingly viewed as an important way to build vital skills that get lawyers noticed”

And even if associates don't make partner, or decide they don't want to, the experience of mixing big-firm corporate and pro bono work makes them highly attractive candidates for non-profit and government service work. Countless big-firm lawyers make the transition each year to the public sector and thrive there. The broad range of pro bono matters offered at big firms today shows that they too can present a viable option for publicly minded young attorneys. 

In handling these matters, lawyers acting pro bono use all the tools of the trade, including class action lawsuits, appellate test cases and creative litigation strategies. On the corporate side, they also deploy their regulatory or commercial skills, for example, in devising new ways to meet sustainability goals through highly innovative cross-border financing mechanisms, or helping to navigate complex technical requirements.

The opportunity to work on—or perhaps play a significant leadership role in—a major public interest case is real and compelling. Associates also enjoy access to very sophisticated pro bono matters, if they want to take them and are willing to devote the time. As firms institutionalize and expand the practice of pro bono—taking on ever-bigger rights cases, complex environmental transactions or global research projects to assist international NGOs in their work—they are pushing public interest beyond traditional boundaries to help right some of society's most pressing injustices.

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Find out more about our Global Pro Bono practice